Arizona hands Vegas fourth straight home loss in 5-2 win

LAS VEGAS (AP) Nick Cousins said he ''couldn't put a finger on'' why teams are playing better in Las Vegas this season.

Nor does he care.

Cousins scored his first game-winning goal of the season and goaltender Darcy Kuemper made 41 saves to lead the Arizona Coyotes to a 5-2 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights on Tuesday night.

The Coyotes snapped an 0-3-1 slide on the road, while handing Vegas its fourth consecutive home loss, the second time in franchise history it's lost four straight at T-Mobile Arena.

''I think guys maybe took `em a little bit lightly since they were coming with the expansion,'' Cousins said. ''Obviously us, we're not gonna take `em lightly any time. And I think that might be it. We've played `em well here.''

Arizona, which improved to 2-1-1 in Las Vegas, was the recipient of a wild bounce after Cousins' initial shot was deflected wide. Vinnie Hinostroza collected the puck and fired it in front, where Cousins was there for a one-timer that slipped past Vegas goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury.

Kuemper, who recently earned a point in nine straight starts, improved to 8-2-3 since the calendar flip to 2019. He's made a league sixth-best 378 saves since Jan. 1.

''He was solid tonight,'' Arizona coach Rick Tocchet said. ''Kemps is seeing the puck. I thought he made a good save in the third, a glove save, that was a rocket going short side, he made that glove save. That was a big one for us.''

Brandon Pirri and Nate Schmidt scored for Vegas, which is now 16-8-3 at home and has lost six of eight. Fleury, who made his league-leading 50th start of the season, made 21 saves.

It marked the fifth time in eight games Vegas' normally high-powered offense was limited to two or fewer goals.

Alex Tuch, who leads Vegas with 40 points, is now mired in a six-game drought without a point or an assist, while first-line forwards William Karlsson and Jonathan Marchessault had their three-game point streaks come to halt.

''We keep taking penalties, it hurts you,'' Vegas coach Gerard Gallant said. ''We kill both of them, but we lost momentum. Your top players are killing penalties then you try and get back. It was a 2-2 game and all of a sudden, we try and get cute again and start making drop passes and passes through the slot, and turnover and they go the other way on odd-man rushes. ... In my opinion we gave them three goals from our mistakes, not from what they deserve.''

Meanwhile, the Coyotes, who entered the game leading the league with an 85.1 penalty kill percentage, kept Vegas silent on its lone power-play opportunity.

After Oesterle buried a wrist shot to break a scoreless tie during a power play midway through the second period, Galchenyuk made it 2-0 when he took a pass from Nick Cousins and broke free down the left side on a breakaway, deked Fleury to his left and slipped the puck into the net.

Pirri ended his six-game drought 29 seconds later when he sniped Kuemper short side to cut Arizona's lead in half. Shortly after Reilly Smith had a chance to tie the game for Vegas with a penalty shot, but clanked it off the post, Schmidt found the back of the net with 30 seconds left in the second to make it 2-2 for his 100th career point.

Archibald and Panik scored late to ice the game for Arizona, which inched closer in the Western Conference wild-card race. The Coyotes are four points behind the second wild-card spot, currently held by Minnesota, which has 59 points. Sandwiched between is Vancouver with 57.

Tocchet agreed with Cousins in that teams are no longer surprised by Vegas' talent, and are arriving a bit more poised and prepared to play hockey, rather than being distracted by what the city has to offer the night before games.

''I think teams are coming in here a little more serious, I just feel like when we come in here, the job's to win a hockey game,'' Tocchet said. ''It's no different than going to any other city. You go to dinner and whatever your guys do. Vegas, I think people are being a little more serious before the game.''

NOTES: The Coyotes were on their annual ''Dads Trip.'' ... Arizona's Kevin Connauton played in his 300th career game. ... Cousins' 17 assists are a career high. ... Stepan has registered three goals and four assists in eight career games against the Golden Knights. ... Vegas' Deryk Engelland played in his 599th career game. ... Vegas' Paul Stastny has at least one point in 14 of last 19 games (4 goals, 15 assists).

UP NEXT

Arizona: Hosts St. Louis on Thursday.

Vegas: Hosts Toronto on Thursday.

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The Golden Knights have won six of seven meetings all-time between the teams, three of them in overtime. The Coyotes have scored as many as three goals in only one of the seven games; they did so in their lone win over Vegas, a 3-2 decision last March 28.

The Coyotes are averaging 2.60 goals per game fourth fewest in the league. Arizona has ranked 24th or lower in scoring in each season dating back to 2014-15.

After winning seven straight games from December 27 through January 8, the Golden Knights have gone 4-7-0 since January 10. Of their seven losses in that stretch, three have been decided by a single goal, and two others have been two-goal games.

Conor Garland has 11 goals since December 22 (21 games), most among rookies in that span. Garland is one of six players tied for the team lead with 11 goals; he can make this the second straight season in which a rookie leads the Coyotes in goals, following Clayton Keller in 2017-18.

Max Pacioretty has seven goals and 14 points in 13 career games versus the Coyotes. He has six goals and 11 points in his last 10 home games; for the season, Pacioretty is averaging 0.83 points per game on home ice (15 in 18 games), compared to 0.58 on the road.